In this article, the administrative law decisions rendered by the Supreme Court of Canada during the 2004-2005 term are reviewed. These decisions addressed four major issues: i) exclusive and concurrent jurisdiction between competing adjudicative bodies; ii) the right to independent adjudication; iii) standard of review; and iv) expertise and deference. Questions relating to exclusive and concurrent jurisdiction occupied the most significant part of the Supreme Court\u27s administrative law energy during the 2004-2005 term. The author analyzes these decisions on jurisdiction, paying particular attention to the many divides between the members of the Court. She argues that the decisions on jurisdiction ratione material between competing trib...
In R. v. Conway, the Supreme Court of Canada reformulated and simplified the test for when an admini...
The article examines how courts apply bills of rights to administrative decisions. It adopts a compa...
In 1976, in the first of these surveys, I dealt exclusively with Nova Scotia decisions involving the...
The 2005-2006 and 2006-2007 terms produced several noteworthy decisions in the area of administrativ...
The 2007-2008 term was a landmark year in Canadian administrative law. The Supreme Court of Canada d...
This article examines two key administrative law decisions of the 2008-2009 Supreme Court of Canada ...
The paper presents issues that are the main subject of Sara Blake’s ‘Administrative Law in Canada.’ ...
Abstract: For forty years, from the Supreme Court’s 1979 decision in CUPE to the 2019 one in Vavilov...
This article provides a novel account of the the ory of judicial review that is evident in the Supre...
The standard of review analysis for judicial review of administrative action developed by the Suprem...
Although the Supreme Court of Canada’s seminal decision in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick has now been ci...
For decades, the Supreme Court of Canada has contemplated the appropriate standard of judicial revie...
In Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, the Supreme Court re-examined its approach to judicial review of admin...
Justice Wilson’s concurring reasons for judgment in the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Nation...
This thesis examines the concept of “deference” in relation to judicial review of administrative dec...
In R. v. Conway, the Supreme Court of Canada reformulated and simplified the test for when an admini...
The article examines how courts apply bills of rights to administrative decisions. It adopts a compa...
In 1976, in the first of these surveys, I dealt exclusively with Nova Scotia decisions involving the...
The 2005-2006 and 2006-2007 terms produced several noteworthy decisions in the area of administrativ...
The 2007-2008 term was a landmark year in Canadian administrative law. The Supreme Court of Canada d...
This article examines two key administrative law decisions of the 2008-2009 Supreme Court of Canada ...
The paper presents issues that are the main subject of Sara Blake’s ‘Administrative Law in Canada.’ ...
Abstract: For forty years, from the Supreme Court’s 1979 decision in CUPE to the 2019 one in Vavilov...
This article provides a novel account of the the ory of judicial review that is evident in the Supre...
The standard of review analysis for judicial review of administrative action developed by the Suprem...
Although the Supreme Court of Canada’s seminal decision in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick has now been ci...
For decades, the Supreme Court of Canada has contemplated the appropriate standard of judicial revie...
In Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, the Supreme Court re-examined its approach to judicial review of admin...
Justice Wilson’s concurring reasons for judgment in the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Nation...
This thesis examines the concept of “deference” in relation to judicial review of administrative dec...
In R. v. Conway, the Supreme Court of Canada reformulated and simplified the test for when an admini...
The article examines how courts apply bills of rights to administrative decisions. It adopts a compa...
In 1976, in the first of these surveys, I dealt exclusively with Nova Scotia decisions involving the...